The
“entire saga” of the Montie Three reflected the extent to which radio
had been “trivialised” and the depths to which journalistic standards
had fallen in the country, renowned broadcaster Kwami Sefa Kayi has
said.
For him, the decision to grant some persons free access to
“the power of the media” to make unsavoury remarks against justices, for
which they were subsequently incarcerated, was “almost depressing” and
should not be allowed to happen again.
The Montie Three, as the
trio – Salifu Maase, Godwin Ako Gunn, and Alistair Taro Nelson – were
known, were convicted for contempt by the Supreme Court for insulting
and threatening some justices of Ghana’s apex court on June 29, 2016 on
Pampaso, a political talk show on Montie FM. They were each handed a
four-month jail term in addition to a GHS 10,000 fine. However,
following appeals by pro-government officials and groups, including the
signing of a petition book by ministers of state among others, President
John Mahama, invoking his powers under Article 72 of the constitution,
granted the three remission after almost a month in prison.
But
on the last edition of Multi TV’s Newsfile for 2016 on Saturday December
24, Mr Kayi, who is also host of Kokrokoo on Peace FM, said the whole
development was an “embarrassment” for all Ghanaians and was “easily”
his “lowest” point for the year.
“My lowest point was the entire
saga of the Montie 3. It’s a lesson to all of us in how not to do some
things,” he told show host Samson Lardy Anyenini, saying the
circumstances surrounding the matter and how it all ended left him with a
“sunken feeling”.
“Never again should we – those of us on radio,
television, those of us in the media – use the power of the media to so
denigrate, malign and insult people to the extent that a whole Supreme
Court had to come in…and then the theatre that happened afterwards that
culminated in a sitting president remitting their sentence… I just hope
it never happens again.”
He continued: “…That’s what really gave
me the lowest low... I think it was an embarrassing moment for all of us
– journalists, politicians, ordinary, everyday Ghanaians, judges. It’s a
blot on our conscience, I think, a very big blot." |
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